Hi!
I know how you feel with the whole llama thing. I'm obsessed with alpacas(I know I know; you just can't find a llama person! lol) and nobody takes them seriously. Hardly anybody knows what they are before I tell them. A couple people have been like, "Is that like an emu?" Hahahah
But anyway, I don't want to put down your love for llamas, but here is why I personally prefer alpacas:
Alpaca fair is finer and more luxurious, and very sought after and expensive. In the ancient Incan culture the peasants were allowed to have llama or guanaco fleece, the lords and nobility were allowed alpaca, and the very highest like the emperor got vicuna(an alpaca relative)
Alpacas are smaller and gentle. It might be just me, but I find a ten foot tall llama a bit intimidating. When my alpaca males are fighting, I'm not very scared to go and try to break it up. With a llama I think I would be pretty traumatized. 0_0
I think alpacas are cuter.
I'm don't want to discourage you or put you down or anything, it was just a thread about llamas and alpacas are very similar, soo...
I started out wanting alpacas, then I was convinced llamas were more friendly, then I preferred alpacas. lol
Now for info on alpaca care, I don't know how much this will help since you want llamas, but I will have tried.
I feed my alpacas a cup full of alpaca feed, a teaspoon of alpaca minerals, and a fourth cup of alpaca fiber nutrients each, once a day. The feed that I get is either in the $teens or $20s, and the minerals and fiber nutrients I think are about $60. It sounds really expensive, but it really depends on how many you have and how much you are making off of them. If you are selling three skeins of yarn a week for 20 bucks a skein(that is how much for alpaca, really!) then I don't think there would be much problem.
I only need to buy feed around every month and a half, fiber nutrients every several months, and minerals several months or so. But I only have three males, so they don't use much.
If you get llamas it would be a good idea to ask the feed store a week before hand to order some feed, since they might not have it on hand at the moment and you don't want to have to not feed the poor fellers for several days till it gets in.
My friend (who has about 30 something quality alpacas) does not worm preventively. I guess you could, but you would have to ask a llama person.
I do not think that llama backs are good to ride on. You can certainly train them to pack, (that is what the Incans bred them for) but I don't think that the back is the right shape like a horse. A little kid is fine.
Yeah, I think that llamas are pettable. Whether my alpacas like it or not, I hold on to them sometimes and pet and hug em. Not obnoxiously though; I don't want to freak them out,lol. One gives me kisses.
Haha I do not know any with those names. Cool names though.
So before you get llamas you need to talk to a llama person and research llamas, and probably visit a good farm. I just wanted to give you a sample of alpaca care that I think is pretty similar to llama, but don't take my word for it.
Whenever I say that phrase I think of "Reading Rainbow."